Did they take her remains? Plus, remembering D-Day; least crowded national parks; ancient tattoos
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| PHOTOGRAPH BY SZ PHOTO/BRIDGEMAN/ACI | | Coconut crabs can measure up to three feet across and clock in at over nine pounds. The world’s largest inveterate can also drag bones to underground burrows.
Researchers have prowled a Pacific island filled with these crabs because signs point to a crash landing of Amelia Earhart’s plane (pictured above) there. Thirteen human bones already were found at the scene.
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| PHOTOGRAPH BY GABRIEL SCARLETT, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC | | They eat it all: These omnivorous crabs eat everything from coconuts to other crabs—and decaying animal flesh. Did they have something to do with Earhart’s disappearance? We find out. | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY BRENT STIRTON | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY DAVID BURNETT | | Celebrating D-Day: Seventy-nine years ago, some 13,000 U.S. paratroopers dropped from planes above the French countryside—an event that changed the course of World War II. Above, the landing was reenacted in 2014 near the town of Sainte-Mère-Église.
Related: ‘Top Secret’ maps reveal the massive Allied effort behind D-Day | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY GUNTHER DEICHMANN | | Inked up: Humans have been getting tattoos for at least 5,200 years—dating back to Ötzi the Iceman. He had many line-like markings thought to have been applied by piercing his skin and adding charcoal dust, Nat Geo reports. Archaeologists have also theorized his tattoos may have been to treat pain or for ritual use—and they’re just one example intriguing ancient markings. (Above, the tattooed remains of a tribal leader from the Philippines who died more than 500 years ago.)
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Today’s soundtrack: Amelia, Joni Mitchell
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